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Moral Majorities Across The Americas Brazil The United States And The Creation Of The Religious Right Benjamin A Cowan

  • SKU: BELL-32738156
Moral Majorities Across The Americas Brazil The United States And The Creation Of The Religious Right Benjamin A Cowan
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Moral Majorities Across The Americas Brazil The United States And The Creation Of The Religious Right Benjamin A Cowan instant download after payment.

Publisher: University of North Carolina Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 5.38 MB
Pages: 304
Author: Benjamin A. Cowan
ISBN: 9781469662060, 146966206X
Language: English
Year: 2021

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Moral Majorities Across The Americas Brazil The United States And The Creation Of The Religious Right Benjamin A Cowan by Benjamin A. Cowan 9781469662060, 146966206X instant download after payment.

This new history of the Christian right does not stop at national or religious boundaries. Benjamin A. Cowan chronicles the advent of a hemispheric religious movement whose current power and influence make headlines and generate no small amount of shock in Brazil and the United States. These two countries, Cowan argues, played host to the principal activists and institutions who collaboratively fashioned the ascendant religious conservatism of the late twentieth century. Cowan not only unearths the deep historical connections between Brazilian and U.S. religious conservatives but also proves just how essential Brazilian thinkers, activists, and institutions were to engendering right-wing political power in the Americas.
Cowan shows that both Protestant and Catholic religious warriors began to commune in the 1930s around a passionate aversion to mainstream ecumenicalism and moderate political ideas. Brazilian intellectuals, politicians, religious leaders, and captains of industry worked with partners at home and in the United States to build a united right. Together, activists engaged in a series of reactionary theological discussions. Their transnational, transdenominational platform fostered a sense of common cause and allowed them to develop a series of strategies that pushed once marginal ideas to the center of public discourse, reshaped religious demographics, and effected a rightward shift in politics across two continents.

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